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New Drug Helps to Dampen Bad Memories

wile_e_wonka writes to tell us Researchers at Harvard and the Montreal-based McGill University are working on a drug that would allow psychiatrists to dampen painful memories in their patients when combined with therapy. "They treated 19 accident or rape victims for ten days, during which the patients were asked to describe their memories of the traumatic event that had happened 10 years earlier. Some patients were given the drug, which is also used to treat amnesia, while others were given a placebo. A week later, they found that patients given the drug showed fewer signs of stress when recalling their trauma."

9 of 255 comments (clear)

  1. Would this be the formula? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 4, Funny

    Would this be the formula: CnH2n+1OH? At least it seems to be popular for dampening memories.

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    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  2. Can it be used offensively? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    An old girlfriend who dumped me, I'd like to erase the memories she has of how painful it was to be with me, so she will give me another try.

  3. this just seems like a bad idea by jt418-93 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it's important to remember the bad times, so you don't end up there again. something about those who can't remember history repeating it.....

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    -.no
    1. Re:this just seems like a bad idea by dave420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Or what about folks who kill themselves because they can't live a day without being caught up in bad shit that's happened? They won't have a chance to learn from their bad times, as their bad times will have killed them. I'm not having a go at you, but bad memories aren't always afterschool-special-type memories, but often some really fucked up shit that reaches down to every atom in your body and flatly refuses to let go, even slightly. Stuff like this drug might actually help some folks try to live a normal life again.

  4. You're not going to get very many good comments... by Himuanam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most traumatic thing most of Slashdot has experienced is having their parents turn off their internet connection, come on, all we're going to get is comments about alcohol or how we're becoming a drug-obsessed culture. Experience something *really* traumatic or know someone who has, and you'll see the benefit of research like this.

  5. Right... by p3d0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    it's important to remember the bad times, so you don't end up there again. something about those who can't remember history repeating it..... Yeah, those rape victims really should try harder next time not to get raped.

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    Patrick Doyle
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  6. 60 Minutes piece by artemis67 · · Score: 4, Informative

    60 Minutes did a report on a drug (Propranolol) that has a similar effect, and is already available on the market (to treat a different symptom). What was interesting about the report was the relationship between adrenaline and the formation of memories; i.e., the bigger the adrenaline surge, the more powerful the memory that is created.

    Here's the whole segment, chopped up into bite-sized morsels:

    The Memory Pill

  7. Ever wonder if the original author reads TFA? by TheMohel · · Score: 5, Informative

    It's not a new drug that was tried by Harvard and McGill, it was an old favorite, propranolol. This is a nonselective beta blocker that has anti-adrenaline actions (oversimplifying radically) in the CNS as well as across the body, and it's used for a dozen purposes other than this one. This was actually fascinating research, because they're basically using an old standby drug to help desensitize certain traumatic memories. There was no assertion in the original article (other than the Star Trek pandering at the end) that the memories were eliminated entirely, although eliminating emotional tags to memories would have the side effect of making them harder to recall.
     
    We know that the beta blockers have significant mood and activity side effects. In fact it's a common limitation on their use. In this case, though, it looks like the researchers are capitalizing on these side effects to make people's handling of trauma better. Cool. This is a use that will probably see more significant human clinical trials in the short run. Propranolol is a very cheap and very well-understood medication.
     
    In the case of the rat studies with the actual new drug, it's early but interesting work that might or might not have human implication in the future. I'll be nervous about it without a lot more research, and I suspect that the greater degree of wiring in the human brain and the relative resilience of memory are going to be harder nuts to crack, at least in the short term.

  8. I presume it also reduces Déja Vu experiences by ardle · · Score: 4, Informative
    I'm not surprised that the drug described in the 60 Minutes show had similar effects; it's the same drug!

    FTFA (first sentence in second paragraph):

    In a new study, published in the Journal of Psychiatric Research, the drug propranolol is used along with therapy to "dampen" memories of trauma victims.

    Here's a Slashdot discussion on it from Jan 2006
    And here's the most useful post from that discussion